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Word: notebooke (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...wouldn't spend $30 for either Hillary or Bill Clinton's book [NOTEBOOK, Aug. 20]. However, I could be talked into buying one by Chelsea--the only Clinton with class. AUGUSTA LITWER Seattle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Sep. 10, 2001 | 9/10/2001 | See Source »

...American Gigolo. In the late '80s teenagers trying to make the basketball team were bounding to school in Strength Shoes guaranteed to boost their dunk shots. Now, inventor Roger Adams is hoping Heelys, a trainer with a detachable wheel in the heel, will precipitate the newest skating fad. (Notebook recommends them only for the coccyx-negligent.) And a Swiss company's shoes simulate the way tall Masai tribesmen walk with a rocking, convex sole they call "the smallest fitness center in the world." Which goes a long way to explaining why the English had to invent the term "sensible shoes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Starting Time | 9/3/2001 | See Source »

...comix artists. In September watch for the mono-named Jason's "Hey, Wait..." from Fantagraphics. Highwater Books also has some new-comers in October: Mat Brinkman's "Teratoid Heights" promises documentary studies of fictional lifeforms and Brian Chippendale's "Maggots" tears 300 pages out of a 1500-page comix notebook...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comix Leaves | 8/24/2001 | See Source »

...could see would be requesting such a volume. Frankly, I hadn’t realized that the “book” I had to read for my internship with Art Education for the Blind would consist of a series of audio tapes and a spiral bound notebook of tactile drawings. Somehow, I had assumed that “Art History Through Touch and Sound” would be a practical guide to finding resources, not the resource itself. After two years of dealing with Harvard’s system of advising, that assumption seemed perfectly reasonable...

Author: By Kristin L. Rakowski, | Title: POSTCARD FROM CHICAGO: Scratching The Surface | 8/17/2001 | See Source »

...returned to my tapes, and began trying to follow along to the audio instructions. I had already looked at the first pages of the notebook, and knew that there was a page identifying the various raised patterns--cross-hatch, dots, vertical lines. There were symbols to identify the top of the page and the doors in an architectural drawing. The tape directed me to a tactile drawing of one of Picasso’s paintings, and my fingers falteringly followed the audio prompts...

Author: By Kristin L. Rakowski, | Title: POSTCARD FROM CHICAGO: Scratching The Surface | 8/17/2001 | See Source »

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